Floirendo, Jr. vs. Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company
Floirendo, Jr. vs. Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company
Floirendo, Jr. vs. Metropolitan Bank and Trust Company
_______________
* FIRST DIVISION.
44
45
46
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ, J.:
For our resolution is the instant Petition for Review on
Certiorari under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of 1
Civil
Procedure, as amended, assailing
2
the Decision dated
February 22, 2001 and Order dated May 2, 2001 rendered
by the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 39, Cagayan de
Oro City in Civil Case No. 98-476, entitled, REYNALDO P.
FLOIRENDO, JR., plaintiff, v. METROPOLITAN BANK
AND TRUST COMPANY, ET AL., defendants.
Reynaldo P. Floirendo, Jr., petitioner, is the president
and chairman of the Board of Directors of Reymill Realty
Corporation, a domestic corporation engaged in real estate
business. On March 20, 1996, he obtained a loan of
P1,000,000.00 from the Metropolitan Bank and Trust
Company, Cagayan de Oro City Branch, respondent, to
infuse additional working capital for his company. As
security for the loan, petitioner executed a real estate
mortgage in favor of respondent bank over his four (4)
parcels of land, all situated at Barangay Carmen, Cagayan
de Oro City.
The loan was renewed for another year secured by the
same real estate mortgage. Petitioner signed a promissory
note dated March 14, 1997 fixing the rate of interest at
15.446% per annum for the first 30 days, subject to
upward/ downward adjustment every 30 days thereafter;
and a penalty charge of 18% per annum based on any
unpaid principal to be computed from date of default until
payment of the obligation. The promissory note likewise
provides that:
_______________
47
48
1.) There must have been a meeting of the minds upon the
contract;
2.) The instrument or document evidencing the contract does
not express the true agreement between the parties; and
3.) The failure of the instrument to express the agreement
must be due to mistake, fraud, inequitable conduct or
accident. (National Irrigation Administration v. Gamit, G.R.
No. 85869, November 5, 1992)
xxx
A perusal further of the complaint and the evidences submitted
by the parties convinced the court that there was certainly a
meeting of the minds between the parties. Plaintiff and defendant
bank entered into a contract of loan, the terms and conditions of
which, especially on the rates of interest, are clearly and
unequivocally spelled out in the promissory note. The court believes
that there was absolutely no mistake, fraud or anything that could
have prevented a meeting of the minds between the parties.
49
50
_______________
51
In order that obligations arising from contracts may have the force
of law between the parties, there must be mutuality between the
parties based on their essential equality. A contract containing a
condition which makes its fulfillment dependent exclusively upon
the uncontrolled will of one of the contracting parties, is void
(Garcia v. Rita Legarda, Inc., 21 SCRA 555). Hence, even assuming
that the P1.8 million loan agreement between the PNB and the
private respondent gave the PNB a license (although in fact there
was none) to increase the interest rate at will during the term of the
loan, that license would have been null and void for being violative
of the principle of mutuality essential in contracts. It would have
invested the loan agreement with the character of a contract of
adhesion, where the parties do not bargain on equal footing, the
weaker partys (the debtor) participation being reduced to the
alternative to take it or leave it (Qua v. Law Union & Rock
Insurance Co., 95 Phil. 85). Such a contract is a veritable trap for
the weaker party whom the courts of justice must protect against
abuse and imposition.
_______________
6 Supra, at footnote 4.
7 Philippine National Bank v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 107569,
November 8, 1994, 238 SCRA 20; Philippine National Bank v. Court of
Appeals, G.R No. 109563, July 9, 1996, 258 SCRA 549; Spouses Florendo
v. Court of Appeals, supra, at footnote 3.
8 G.R. No. 148753, July 20, 2004, 435 SCRA 565, citing Polo-tan, Sr. v.
Court of Appeals, 296 SCRA 247 (1998); Philippine National Bank v.
Court of Appeals, supra, at footnote 7; Garcia v. Rita Legarda, Inc.,
supra, at footnote 4; Qua Chee Gan v. Law Union and Rock Insurance Co.
Ltd., 98 Phil. 85 (1955); and Imperial v. Jaucian, supra, at footnote 10.
52
_______________
53
_______________
12 Supra, at footnote 4.
13 Supra, at footnote 4.
14 G.R. No. 131622, November 27, 1998, 299 SCRA 481.
54
_______________
55
o0o
56